Augusta, Ga. – Tiger Woods and the Masters should have been embarrassed on Saturday. Neither seems capable of that emotion.
Perhaps the greatest golfer ever and the greatest golf tournament in existence should have held themselves to higher standards.
The tournament should have recognized Woods' rules violation during the second round, then should have intervened before Woods could sign his scorecard. Woods should have displayed a golfing form of honor by withdrawing when he realized he broke the rules while attempting to give himself a competitive advantage, even if his mistake was honest.
Instead, the Masters invoked a rule that shouldn't necessarily apply to obvious mistakes like the one Woods made, to allow him to remain in the tournament with a two-shot penalty. By the end of Saturday, Woods stood four behind the lead, with a chance to win a tainted major.
"Under the rules of golf, I can play," Woods said.
While the Masters and Woods adhered to the letter of the rules, the series of events made Augusta National smell about as bad as it does when the groundskeepers spread fertilizer to soak up a heavy rain, especially when the efforts to salvage Woods' eligibility came one day after the tourney penalized a 14-year-old for slow play on a day filled with slow players.
Don't take my word for it. Take it from one of golf's most respected elders.
"I'm a pro now, since '89," said Ernie Els. "I've never seen a guy sign for a scorecard and then come back and play the next day after a rules infringement. It's as simple as that. Nothing against nobody. The rules of the game is there, and it's always been there, and this has never happened."